The
Governor of Ekiti state has announced that women in the state will now
enjoy 16 weeks as maternity leave after giving birth.
Governor Ayodele Fayose
The Ekiti State Government (EKSG) on Monday announced an increase
in the maternity leave period for women in its public service from 12
weeks to 16 weeks.
The Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Information, Youth
and Sports Development, Mr. Kola Ajumobi, said this at a public
enlightenment forum in Ado Ekiti, the state capital.
He said that the gesture was approved by the state governor, Mr
Ayodele Fayose, as part of his display of love and special regard for
the womenfolk in the state. He said it was also aimed at encouraging
exclusive breast feeding for newly born children in the first six months
of birth.
It is also meant to promote good nutrition for both mothers and their new born children, he said.
Ajumobi said that nursing mothers would, in addition to the four
months, be granted two hours’ off duty every day for a period of six
months from the date they resumed from maternity leave.
According to him, the commitment of the Fayose-led administration
to the reduction in mothers and children’s mortality and morbidity rate
to the barest minimum remains sacrosanct.
Ajumobi said the crèche at the state secretariat had also been
invigorated to boost bonding between mothers and their children during
official working hours without undue hindrance to performance and
efficiency at the workplace.
The permanent secretary lamented that lack of good nutrition;
poverty, hunger as well as lack of access to economic and political
empowerment had largely contributed to high maternal and child
mortality.
He, however, noted that the present administration in the state
would continue to roll out various palliative packages exclusively for
women to empower and guard them from avoidable travails.
Ajumobi said such measures already in existence include the
provision of N500million as revolving soft-loan to promote small and
medium Enterprises driven by women.
Also, women farmers were being supported with various incentives, he said.
According to him, government has also encouraged women’s access to political power.
Harmful traditional practices to woman’s nutritional and sexual
reproductive health, such as widowhood rites and inheritance had become
criminal offences in the state, he said.
He said that rapists and wife beaters now face life sentences in the state.
-NAN
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